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Diving Enthusiasts come have fun with the Worlds Largest Underwater Theme Park of Bahrain

Dive Bahrain, the world's biggest submerged amusement park spreading over an area of 100,000m2, complete with an indented Boeing 747, is currently open to diving fanatic.

The site, in nearness to Bahrain International Airport, has a 70m- since quite a while ago decommissioned Boeing 747 as its focal point, the biggest aircraft ever to be deliberately submerged. The world-class project was created in close collaboration between the Bahrain Tourism and Exhibitions Authority (BTEA) and the Supreme Council for Environment (SCE).

Dive Bahrain expects to give guests the chance to take pleasure in an exceptional diving experience inside a huge zone. Notwithstanding the Boeing 747, the recently opened submerged amusement park will highlight an imitation of a traditional Bahraini pearl merchants house, which is being administered by Diyar Al Muharraq, artificial coral reefs and other sculptures that will be manufactured and submerged to give a safe haven for coral reef development and to guarantee a feasible territory for marine life.

The eco-friendly park will also give scientists a rich wellspring of data on marine ecologies, and will improve ecological mindfulness on the significance of saving marine life.

The amusement park structures some portion of the BTEAs strategy of boosting tourism industry and further advancing this fundamental division by utilizing the Kingdom's natural resources. The recreation center is relied upon to pull in worldwide acknowledgment and become a universal vacation spot, given its size and area just as the extraordinary experience it will offer to both tourists and diving enthusiasts.

Since its effective submersion, proficient divers from enrolled dive centers have led intermittent examinations of the aircraft to guarantee the recreation center's wellbeing to both expert and leisure divers.
The eco-friendly project will see Bahrain rise as a key player in the field of eco-tourism and marine wildlife protection by fusing worldwide ecological gauges.

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